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A neutron/X-ray diffraction, IR, and 1H/29Si NMR spectroscopic investigation of armenite: Behavior of extra framework Ca cations and H2O molecules in microporous silicates

Identifieur interne : 004C99 ( PascalFrancis/Curation ); précédent : 004C98; suivant : 004D00

A neutron/X-ray diffraction, IR, and 1H/29Si NMR spectroscopic investigation of armenite: Behavior of extra framework Ca cations and H2O molecules in microporous silicates

Auteurs : Charles A. Geiger [Autriche] ; G. Diego Gatta [Italie] ; XIANYU XUE [Japon] ; Garry J. Mcintyre [France, Australie]

Source :

RBID : Pascal:12-0311881

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

The crystal chemistry of armenite, ideally BaCa2Al6Si9O30 . 2 H2O, from Wasenalp, Valais, Switzerland was studied. Armenite typically forms in relatively low-temperature hydrothermal veins and fissures and has small pores containing Ca cations and H2O molecules as extra-framework species. Single-crystal neutron and X-ray diffraction measurements were made on armenite from the above locality for the first time. IR powder spectroscopic measurements were made from room temperature (RT) down to 10 K. 1H and 29Si NMR measurements were made at RT. Attention was given to investigating the behavior of the extra-framework species and hydrogen bonding. The diffraction results show new features not observed before in published diffraction studies on armenite crystals from other localities. The neutron results also give the first static description of the protons, allowing bond distances and angles relating to the H2O molecules and H-bonds to be determined. The diffraction results indicate Al/Si order in the framework. Four crystallographically independent Ca and H2O molecule sites were refined, whereby both sites appear to have partial occupancies such that locally a Ca atom can have only a single H2O molecule bonded to it through an ion-dipole interaction. The Ca cation is further bonded to six O atoms of the framework forming a quasi cluster around it. The IR spectrum of armenite is characterized in the OH-stretching region at RT by two broad bands at roughly 3470 and 3410 cm-1 and by a single H2O bending mode at 1654 cm-1. At 10 K four intense OH bands are located at 3479, 3454, 3401 and 3384 cm-1 and two H2O bending modes at 1650 and 1606 cm-1. The 29Si MAS NMR spectra show four resonances at -81.9, -83.2, -94.9 and -101.8 ppm that are assigned to crystallographically different Si sites in an ordered structure, although their relative intensities deviate somewhat from those predicted for complete Al/Si order. The 1H MAS spectra contain a single main resonance near 5.3 ppm and a smaller one near 2.7 ppm, which can be assigned to H2O molecules bonded to Ca and a second H2O type located in a partially occupied site, respectively. Bonding for the extra-framework "Ca-oxygen-anion-H2O-molecule quasi-clusters" and also the nature of H-bonding in the microporous zeolites scolecite, wairakite and epistilbite are analyzed. The average OH stretching wavenumbers shown by the IR spectra of armenite and scolecite are, for example, not far removed from that observed in liquid H2O, but greater than that of ice. What remains poorly understood in microporous silicates is how the ion-dipole interaction in quasi clusters affects H-bonding strength between the H2O molecules and the aluminosilicate framework.
pA  
A01 01  1    @0 0044-2968
A02 01      @0 ZEKRDZ
A03   1    @0 Z. Kristallogr.
A05       @2 227
A06       @2 7
A08 01  1  ENG  @1 A neutron/X-ray diffraction, IR, and 1H/29Si NMR spectroscopic investigation of armenite: Behavior of extra framework Ca cations and H2O molecules in microporous silicates
A11 01  1    @1 GEIGER (Charles A.)
A11 02  1    @1 DIEGO GATTA (G.)
A11 03  1    @1 XIANYU XUE
A11 04  1    @1 MCINTYRE (Garry J.)
A14 01      @1 Fachbereich für Materialforschung und Physik, Abteilung Mineralogie, Universität Salzburg, Hellbrunnerstr. 34 @2 5020 Salzburg @3 AUT @Z 1 aut.
A14 02      @1 Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Botticelli 23 @2 20133 Milano @3 ITA @Z 2 aut.
A14 03      @1 CNR-Istituto per la Dinamica dei Processi Ambientali @2 Milano @3 ITA @Z 2 aut.
A14 04      @1 Institute for Study of the Earth's Interior, Okayama University @2 Misasa, Tottori 682-0193 @3 JPN @Z 3 aut.
A14 05      @1 Institut Laue-Langevin, B.P. 156 @2 38024 Grenoble @3 FRA @Z 4 aut.
A14 06      @1 Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Locked Bag 2001, Kirrawee DC NSW 2232 @3 AUS @Z 4 aut.
A20       @1 411-426
A21       @1 2012
A23 01      @0 ENG
A43 01      @1 INIST @2 915 @5 354000506636250030
A44       @0 0000 @1 © 2012 INIST-CNRS. All rights reserved.
A45       @0 3/4 p.
A47 01  1    @0 12-0311881
A60       @1 P
A61       @0 A
A64 01  1    @0 Zeitschrift für Kristallographie
A66 01      @0 DEU
C01 01    ENG  @0 The crystal chemistry of armenite, ideally BaCa2Al6Si9O30 . 2 H2O, from Wasenalp, Valais, Switzerland was studied. Armenite typically forms in relatively low-temperature hydrothermal veins and fissures and has small pores containing Ca cations and H2O molecules as extra-framework species. Single-crystal neutron and X-ray diffraction measurements were made on armenite from the above locality for the first time. IR powder spectroscopic measurements were made from room temperature (RT) down to 10 K. 1H and 29Si NMR measurements were made at RT. Attention was given to investigating the behavior of the extra-framework species and hydrogen bonding. The diffraction results show new features not observed before in published diffraction studies on armenite crystals from other localities. The neutron results also give the first static description of the protons, allowing bond distances and angles relating to the H2O molecules and H-bonds to be determined. The diffraction results indicate Al/Si order in the framework. Four crystallographically independent Ca and H2O molecule sites were refined, whereby both sites appear to have partial occupancies such that locally a Ca atom can have only a single H2O molecule bonded to it through an ion-dipole interaction. The Ca cation is further bonded to six O atoms of the framework forming a quasi cluster around it. The IR spectrum of armenite is characterized in the OH-stretching region at RT by two broad bands at roughly 3470 and 3410 cm-1 and by a single H2O bending mode at 1654 cm-1. At 10 K four intense OH bands are located at 3479, 3454, 3401 and 3384 cm-1 and two H2O bending modes at 1650 and 1606 cm-1. The 29Si MAS NMR spectra show four resonances at -81.9, -83.2, -94.9 and -101.8 ppm that are assigned to crystallographically different Si sites in an ordered structure, although their relative intensities deviate somewhat from those predicted for complete Al/Si order. The 1H MAS spectra contain a single main resonance near 5.3 ppm and a smaller one near 2.7 ppm, which can be assigned to H2O molecules bonded to Ca and a second H2O type located in a partially occupied site, respectively. Bonding for the extra-framework "Ca-oxygen-anion-H2O-molecule quasi-clusters" and also the nature of H-bonding in the microporous zeolites scolecite, wairakite and epistilbite are analyzed. The average OH stretching wavenumbers shown by the IR spectra of armenite and scolecite are, for example, not far removed from that observed in liquid H2O, but greater than that of ice. What remains poorly understood in microporous silicates is how the ion-dipole interaction in quasi clusters affects H-bonding strength between the H2O molecules and the aluminosilicate framework.
C02 01  3    @0 001B60A12L
C02 02  3    @0 001B80A05R
C02 03  X    @0 001C01I05
C03 01  3  FRE  @0 Diffraction neutron @5 01
C03 01  3  ENG  @0 Neutron diffraction @5 01
C03 02  3  FRE  @0 Diffraction RX @5 02
C03 02  3  ENG  @0 XRD @5 02
C03 03  3  FRE  @0 Spectre IR @5 03
C03 03  3  ENG  @0 Infrared spectra @5 03
C03 04  3  FRE  @0 Résonance magnétique nucléaire @5 04
C03 04  3  ENG  @0 Nuclear magnetic resonance @5 04
C03 05  3  FRE  @0 Cristallochimie @5 05
C03 05  3  ENG  @0 Crystal chemistry @5 05
C03 06  3  FRE  @0 Liaison hydrogène @5 06
C03 06  3  ENG  @0 Hydrogen bonds @5 06
C03 07  3  FRE  @0 Angle liaison @5 07
C03 07  3  ENG  @0 Bond angle @5 07
C03 08  3  FRE  @0 Longueur liaison @5 08
C03 08  3  ENG  @0 Bond lengths @5 08
C03 09  X  FRE  @0 Liaison simple @5 09
C03 09  X  ENG  @0 Single bond @5 09
C03 09  X  SPA  @0 Enlace simple @5 09
C03 10  3  FRE  @0 Interaction dipolaire @5 10
C03 10  3  ENG  @0 Dipole interactions @5 10
C03 11  X  FRE  @0 Etirement @5 11
C03 11  X  ENG  @0 Stretching @5 11
C03 11  X  SPA  @0 Estiramiento @5 11
C03 12  3  FRE  @0 Flexion @5 12
C03 12  3  ENG  @0 Bending @5 12
C03 13  3  FRE  @0 Spectrométrie masse @5 13
C03 13  3  ENG  @0 Mass spectroscopy @5 13
C03 14  3  FRE  @0 Non stoechiométrie @5 14
C03 14  3  ENG  @0 Nonstoichiometry @5 14
C03 15  3  FRE  @0 Matériau poreux @5 15
C03 15  3  ENG  @0 Porous materials @5 15
C03 16  3  FRE  @0 Silicate @2 NA @5 16
C03 16  3  ENG  @0 Silicates @2 NA @5 16
C03 17  3  FRE  @0 Monocristal @5 17
C03 17  3  ENG  @0 Monocrystals @5 17
C03 18  3  FRE  @0 Silicium @2 NC @5 18
C03 18  3  ENG  @0 Silicon @2 NC @5 18
C03 19  3  FRE  @0 Zéolite @5 19
C03 19  3  ENG  @0 Zeolites @5 19
C03 20  3  FRE  @0 Glace @5 29
C03 20  3  ENG  @0 Ice @5 29
C03 21  X  FRE  @0 Aluminosilicate @2 NA @5 30
C03 21  X  ENG  @0 Aluminosilicates @2 NA @5 30
C03 21  X  SPA  @0 Aluminosilicato @2 NA @5 30
C03 22  3  FRE  @0 Si @4 INC @5 46
C03 23  3  FRE  @0 6112L @4 INC @5 71
C03 24  3  FRE  @0 8105R @4 INC @5 72
C03 25  3  FRE  @0 8275 @4 INC @5 73
N21       @1 240

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Pascal:12-0311881

Le document en format XML

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Si NMR spectroscopic investigation of armenite: Behavior of extra framework Ca cations and H
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O molecules in microporous silicates</title>
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<title xml:lang="en" level="a">A neutron/X-ray diffraction, IR, and
<sup>1</sup>
H/
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Si NMR spectroscopic investigation of armenite: Behavior of extra framework Ca cations and H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules in microporous silicates</title>
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<s1>CNR-Istituto per la Dinamica dei Processi Ambientali</s1>
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<s1>Institute for Study of the Earth's Interior, Okayama University</s1>
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<name sortKey="Mcintyre, Garry J" sort="Mcintyre, Garry J" uniqKey="Mcintyre G" first="Garry J." last="Mcintyre">Garry J. Mcintyre</name>
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<term>Aluminosilicates</term>
<term>Bending</term>
<term>Bond angle</term>
<term>Bond lengths</term>
<term>Crystal chemistry</term>
<term>Dipole interactions</term>
<term>Hydrogen bonds</term>
<term>Ice</term>
<term>Infrared spectra</term>
<term>Mass spectroscopy</term>
<term>Monocrystals</term>
<term>Neutron diffraction</term>
<term>Nonstoichiometry</term>
<term>Nuclear magnetic resonance</term>
<term>Porous materials</term>
<term>Silicates</term>
<term>Silicon</term>
<term>Single bond</term>
<term>Stretching</term>
<term>XRD</term>
<term>Zeolites</term>
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<term>Diffraction neutron</term>
<term>Diffraction RX</term>
<term>Spectre IR</term>
<term>Résonance magnétique nucléaire</term>
<term>Cristallochimie</term>
<term>Liaison hydrogène</term>
<term>Angle liaison</term>
<term>Longueur liaison</term>
<term>Liaison simple</term>
<term>Interaction dipolaire</term>
<term>Etirement</term>
<term>Flexion</term>
<term>Spectrométrie masse</term>
<term>Non stoechiométrie</term>
<term>Matériau poreux</term>
<term>Silicate</term>
<term>Monocristal</term>
<term>Silicium</term>
<term>Zéolite</term>
<term>Glace</term>
<term>Aluminosilicate</term>
<term>Si</term>
<term>6112L</term>
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<front>
<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">The crystal chemistry of armenite, ideally BaCa
<sub>2</sub>
Al
<sub>6</sub>
Si
<sub>9</sub>
O
<sub>30</sub>
. 2 H
<sub>2</sub>
O, from Wasenalp, Valais, Switzerland was studied. Armenite typically forms in relatively low-temperature hydrothermal veins and fissures and has small pores containing Ca cations and H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules as extra-framework species. Single-crystal neutron and X-ray diffraction measurements were made on armenite from the above locality for the first time. IR powder spectroscopic measurements were made from room temperature (RT) down to 10 K.
<sup>1</sup>
H and
<sup>29</sup>
Si NMR measurements were made at RT. Attention was given to investigating the behavior of the extra-framework species and hydrogen bonding. The diffraction results show new features not observed before in published diffraction studies on armenite crystals from other localities. The neutron results also give the first static description of the protons, allowing bond distances and angles relating to the H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules and H-bonds to be determined. The diffraction results indicate Al/Si order in the framework. Four crystallographically independent Ca and H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecule sites were refined, whereby both sites appear to have partial occupancies such that locally a Ca atom can have only a single H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecule bonded to it through an ion-dipole interaction. The Ca cation is further bonded to six O atoms of the framework forming a quasi cluster around it. The IR spectrum of armenite is characterized in the OH-stretching region at RT by two broad bands at roughly 3470 and 3410 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
and by a single H
<sub>2</sub>
O bending mode at 1654 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
. At 10 K four intense OH bands are located at 3479, 3454, 3401 and 3384 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
and two H
<sub>2</sub>
O bending modes at 1650 and 1606 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
. The
<sup>29</sup>
Si MAS NMR spectra show four resonances at -81.9, -83.2, -94.9 and -101.8 ppm that are assigned to crystallographically different Si sites in an ordered structure, although their relative intensities deviate somewhat from those predicted for complete Al/Si order. The
<sup>1</sup>
H MAS spectra contain a single main resonance near 5.3 ppm and a smaller one near 2.7 ppm, which can be assigned to H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules bonded to Ca and a second H
<sub>2</sub>
O type located in a partially occupied site, respectively. Bonding for the extra-framework "Ca-oxygen-anion-H
<sub>2</sub>
O-molecule quasi-clusters" and also the nature of H-bonding in the microporous zeolites scolecite, wairakite and epistilbite are analyzed. The average OH stretching wavenumbers shown by the IR spectra of armenite and scolecite are, for example, not far removed from that observed in liquid H
<sub>2</sub>
O, but greater than that of ice. What remains poorly understood in microporous silicates is how the ion-dipole interaction in quasi clusters affects H-bonding strength between the H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules and the aluminosilicate framework.</div>
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<sup>1</sup>
H/
<sup>29</sup>
Si NMR spectroscopic investigation of armenite: Behavior of extra framework Ca cations and H
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O molecules in microporous silicates</s1>
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<s3>AUT</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
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<s3>ITA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
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<s1>CNR-Istituto per la Dinamica dei Processi Ambientali</s1>
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<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
</fA14>
<fA14 i1="04">
<s1>Institute for Study of the Earth's Interior, Okayama University</s1>
<s2>Misasa, Tottori 682-0193</s2>
<s3>JPN</s3>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
</fA14>
<fA14 i1="05">
<s1>Institut Laue-Langevin, B.P. 156</s1>
<s2>38024 Grenoble</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</fA14>
<fA14 i1="06">
<s1>Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Locked Bag 2001, Kirrawee DC NSW 2232</s1>
<s3>AUS</s3>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</fA14>
<fA20>
<s1>411-426</s1>
</fA20>
<fA21>
<s1>2012</s1>
</fA21>
<fA23 i1="01">
<s0>ENG</s0>
</fA23>
<fA43 i1="01">
<s1>INIST</s1>
<s2>915</s2>
<s5>354000506636250030</s5>
</fA43>
<fA44>
<s0>0000</s0>
<s1>© 2012 INIST-CNRS. All rights reserved.</s1>
</fA44>
<fA45>
<s0>3/4 p.</s0>
</fA45>
<fA47 i1="01" i2="1">
<s0>12-0311881</s0>
</fA47>
<fA60>
<s1>P</s1>
</fA60>
<fA61>
<s0>A</s0>
</fA61>
<fA64 i1="01" i2="1">
<s0>Zeitschrift für Kristallographie</s0>
</fA64>
<fA66 i1="01">
<s0>DEU</s0>
</fA66>
<fC01 i1="01" l="ENG">
<s0>The crystal chemistry of armenite, ideally BaCa
<sub>2</sub>
Al
<sub>6</sub>
Si
<sub>9</sub>
O
<sub>30</sub>
. 2 H
<sub>2</sub>
O, from Wasenalp, Valais, Switzerland was studied. Armenite typically forms in relatively low-temperature hydrothermal veins and fissures and has small pores containing Ca cations and H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules as extra-framework species. Single-crystal neutron and X-ray diffraction measurements were made on armenite from the above locality for the first time. IR powder spectroscopic measurements were made from room temperature (RT) down to 10 K.
<sup>1</sup>
H and
<sup>29</sup>
Si NMR measurements were made at RT. Attention was given to investigating the behavior of the extra-framework species and hydrogen bonding. The diffraction results show new features not observed before in published diffraction studies on armenite crystals from other localities. The neutron results also give the first static description of the protons, allowing bond distances and angles relating to the H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules and H-bonds to be determined. The diffraction results indicate Al/Si order in the framework. Four crystallographically independent Ca and H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecule sites were refined, whereby both sites appear to have partial occupancies such that locally a Ca atom can have only a single H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecule bonded to it through an ion-dipole interaction. The Ca cation is further bonded to six O atoms of the framework forming a quasi cluster around it. The IR spectrum of armenite is characterized in the OH-stretching region at RT by two broad bands at roughly 3470 and 3410 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
and by a single H
<sub>2</sub>
O bending mode at 1654 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
. At 10 K four intense OH bands are located at 3479, 3454, 3401 and 3384 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
and two H
<sub>2</sub>
O bending modes at 1650 and 1606 cm
<sup>-1</sup>
. The
<sup>29</sup>
Si MAS NMR spectra show four resonances at -81.9, -83.2, -94.9 and -101.8 ppm that are assigned to crystallographically different Si sites in an ordered structure, although their relative intensities deviate somewhat from those predicted for complete Al/Si order. The
<sup>1</sup>
H MAS spectra contain a single main resonance near 5.3 ppm and a smaller one near 2.7 ppm, which can be assigned to H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules bonded to Ca and a second H
<sub>2</sub>
O type located in a partially occupied site, respectively. Bonding for the extra-framework "Ca-oxygen-anion-H
<sub>2</sub>
O-molecule quasi-clusters" and also the nature of H-bonding in the microporous zeolites scolecite, wairakite and epistilbite are analyzed. The average OH stretching wavenumbers shown by the IR spectra of armenite and scolecite are, for example, not far removed from that observed in liquid H
<sub>2</sub>
O, but greater than that of ice. What remains poorly understood in microporous silicates is how the ion-dipole interaction in quasi clusters affects H-bonding strength between the H
<sub>2</sub>
O molecules and the aluminosilicate framework.</s0>
</fC01>
<fC02 i1="01" i2="3">
<s0>001B60A12L</s0>
</fC02>
<fC02 i1="02" i2="3">
<s0>001B80A05R</s0>
</fC02>
<fC02 i1="03" i2="X">
<s0>001C01I05</s0>
</fC02>
<fC03 i1="01" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Diffraction neutron</s0>
<s5>01</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="01" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Neutron diffraction</s0>
<s5>01</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="02" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Diffraction RX</s0>
<s5>02</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="02" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>XRD</s0>
<s5>02</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="03" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Spectre IR</s0>
<s5>03</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="03" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Infrared spectra</s0>
<s5>03</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="04" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Résonance magnétique nucléaire</s0>
<s5>04</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="04" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Nuclear magnetic resonance</s0>
<s5>04</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="05" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Cristallochimie</s0>
<s5>05</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="05" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Crystal chemistry</s0>
<s5>05</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="06" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Liaison hydrogène</s0>
<s5>06</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="06" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Hydrogen bonds</s0>
<s5>06</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="07" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Angle liaison</s0>
<s5>07</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="07" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Bond angle</s0>
<s5>07</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="08" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Longueur liaison</s0>
<s5>08</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="08" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Bond lengths</s0>
<s5>08</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="09" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Liaison simple</s0>
<s5>09</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="09" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Single bond</s0>
<s5>09</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="09" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Enlace simple</s0>
<s5>09</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="10" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Interaction dipolaire</s0>
<s5>10</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="10" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Dipole interactions</s0>
<s5>10</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="11" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Etirement</s0>
<s5>11</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="11" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Stretching</s0>
<s5>11</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="11" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Estiramiento</s0>
<s5>11</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="12" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Flexion</s0>
<s5>12</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="12" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Bending</s0>
<s5>12</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="13" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Spectrométrie masse</s0>
<s5>13</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="13" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Mass spectroscopy</s0>
<s5>13</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="14" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Non stoechiométrie</s0>
<s5>14</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="14" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Nonstoichiometry</s0>
<s5>14</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="15" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Matériau poreux</s0>
<s5>15</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="15" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Porous materials</s0>
<s5>15</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="16" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Silicate</s0>
<s2>NA</s2>
<s5>16</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="16" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Silicates</s0>
<s2>NA</s2>
<s5>16</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="17" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Monocristal</s0>
<s5>17</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="17" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Monocrystals</s0>
<s5>17</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="18" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Silicium</s0>
<s2>NC</s2>
<s5>18</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="18" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Silicon</s0>
<s2>NC</s2>
<s5>18</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="19" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Zéolite</s0>
<s5>19</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="19" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Zeolites</s0>
<s5>19</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="20" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Glace</s0>
<s5>29</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="20" i2="3" l="ENG">
<s0>Ice</s0>
<s5>29</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="21" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Aluminosilicate</s0>
<s2>NA</s2>
<s5>30</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="21" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Aluminosilicates</s0>
<s2>NA</s2>
<s5>30</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="21" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Aluminosilicato</s0>
<s2>NA</s2>
<s5>30</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="22" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>Si</s0>
<s4>INC</s4>
<s5>46</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="23" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>6112L</s0>
<s4>INC</s4>
<s5>71</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="24" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>8105R</s0>
<s4>INC</s4>
<s5>72</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="25" i2="3" l="FRE">
<s0>8275</s0>
<s4>INC</s4>
<s5>73</s5>
</fC03>
<fN21>
<s1>240</s1>
</fN21>
</pA>
</standard>
</inist>
</record>

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   |texte=   A neutron/X-ray diffraction, IR, and 1H/29Si NMR spectroscopic investigation of armenite: Behavior of extra framework Ca cations and H2O molecules in microporous silicates
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